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Dear people of the world; you have nothing to lose but your chains

Thinkers of the World, you have nothing to lose but your chains.

Do you ever find yourself working busy as a beaver? You loose track of yourself, and the social network around you

The reason the beaver died: when the beaver left its habitat (in the winter) it knew the exact (measured) location that a hole should be [or at least a fragile ice "architecture"] away from its underwater habitat. Unfortunetly, times change, rivers change, lakes change, everything changes, and those who cannot adapt immediately by learning, will die.  So when the beaver left its home, it went to a “calculated” distance where there should be an opening in the ice, and “Bang”, “bang”, “bang” hit its head on the ice, trying to break it – when there was clearly a hole 36″ (3 feet) away from it. And again “bang”, “bang”, “bang”.

What the point I’m trying to make?

The national geographic showed compassion and care by trying to direct the beaver in the right direction, they even left  food at the port of the hole for the beaver – but day after day, life went on, and the beaver never went up to the hole. By spring, the scientists dug up the habitat only to find 4 carcus’ – the beavers starved to death. So what does this tell us about us?

When you are so hardwired for success you stop anticipating unexpected events – adjusting for what we should know tomorrow. This has to change in us; in you because I do it too.  Learn a little about a lot  and progress, practice and learn more.

Adjust to the unexpected and be careful.

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